Page:Prometheus bound - Browning (1833).djvu/171

 And now more years are finished,— For thee another song is said. Thy voice hath lost its cooing tone; The lisping of thy words is gone: Thy step treads firm—thine hair not flings Round thee its length of golden rings— Departed, like all lovely things! Yet art thou still made up of glee, When my now song is said for thee.

Wisely and well responded they, Who cut thy golden hair away, What time I made the bootless prayer, That they should pause awhile, and spare. They said, 'its sheen did less agree With boyhood than with infancy.' And thus I know it aye must be. Before the revel noise is done, The revel lamps pale one by one.